ENGLISH040607 IPR.P65

ENGLISH040607 IPR.P65

1 $2.50 Marching for Life: June 2004 Defying threats, a movement of rural Hondurans leads Central America’s struggle against illegal logging and the corruption that sustains it By Bruna Genovese Bloodshed in the Forests of Honduras only resolved by ordering the killing of Father Tamayo.”1 It is a crime in Honduras to threaten a person’s life, yet Ramos’ Conservationists and human rights activists in Honduras comments went unremarked by the Honduran government. run grave risks as they fight to preserve what remains of a On June 20, 2003, just one month before Reyes’ mur- unique range of ecosystems in Olancho, the country’s larg- der, Father Tamayo led some 3,000 people on a 175-mile est department. Intimidation and murder are the weapons of march to protest illegal logging in Olancho. Illegal timber choice employed by those who sack the forests and despoil harvesting has devastated the department’s forests, causing the environment. In the past few years, three Olancho environmentalists have met violent death. Amnesty International has published re- ports of ongoing threats against those who have opposed the uncontrolled and illegal destruc- tion of Olancho’s forest reserves. On June 30, 2001, Carlos Roberto Flores was killed in the municipality of Gualaco. On November 24, 2002, community leader Mauricio Hernández from the village of Las Cañas in Jano municipality was shot in the fore- head with an AK-47. In July 2003, in the mu- nicipality of El Rosario, 21-year old Carlos Arturo Reyes was riddled with bullets in his own backyard. Reyes had been receiving death threats for months, but he believed he had put them behind him when he fled his home in Guata and moved to El Rosario. Yet an assassin found him. Now others on an alleged hit list, 17 names in all, must go about their important work in con- stant fear that they will be next. Father Andrés Tamayo of Salamá, Olancho, the charismatic leader of the grassroots Envi- ronmental Movement of Olancho (Movimiento Ambientalista Olanchano, MAO) is a major thorn in the side of the country’s many illegal loggers. On May 5 and 6, 2003, José Ramón Ramos, the mayor of Salamá, stated publicly, “The environmental problem in Olancho will be Olancho’s forests are being emptied by the truckload. A Publication of the Center for International Policy 2 of rampant, indiscriminate logging—is now being mirrored water-table levels to drop and poverty to rise. Father in Olancho. And, as in Mexico, the effects promise to be Tamayo’s “March for Life” (Gran Marcha por la Vida), widespread ecological devastation for generations to come. which started in Olancho’s capital, Juticalpa, culminated in Traditionally, forest ecosystems in Honduras have been Tegucigalpa, the capital of Honduras, on June 27. It was valued primarily in terms of the timber they provide. How- supported by twenty-seven religious, human rights, ever, what forests provide goes far beyond mere timber: campesino, student, and labor organizations. trees diminish wind erosion, regulate climate, maintain mi- The marchers prepared seven demands that they hoped croclimatic conditions in local areas, and preserve biological to discuss with Honduras’ President, Ricardo Maduro, who diversity. Furthermore, they protect water catchments and had campaigned in 2002 on a platform of fighting corruption stream banks, reduce flooding, and regulate stream flow. and similar illegal activity. Instead, they were met at the Presi- Some of these important forest functions in Olancho have dential Palace by a small army of anti-riot police, armed been disrupted. For the department’s residents, serious wa- with the usual assortment of rubber truncheons, protective ter shortages have become a cruel reality in recent years. Water table levels have dropped precipitously around the village of Yocón, for example, and 12 out of 15 of its springs have sim- ply dried up. In San Pedro de Catacamas, residents have had to dig 120-140 artesian wells before they hit water. In San Francisco de la Paz, fresh wa- ter sources have completely dried up. Even after drilling 400- meter deep wells, people have been unable to find water. The most affected of all are rural people who are forced to move from place to place searching for water for their very survival. 3 Honduras Illegal Logging: The Lion’s Population: 6,669,789, in an area slightly larger than Tennessee Share Per Capita Income, 2002: $925 Honduras This Week Income Ratio, Wealthiest 10% To Poorest 10%: 92 times , an Population Earning Less Than $2 a Day: 44.4% English-language weekly, cites Ranking, Transparency International Corruption Perceptions Index: 106 out of 133 forestry expert Filippo del Probability at Birth of Not Surviving to Age 40: 13.8% Gatto’s groundbreaking study “Governance and Poverty Implications of Illegal Timber helmets, and metal shields. Trade in Central America,” which places logging into three Olancho: An Ecological Mosaic categories: legal, legalized, and illegal.4 Legal production of At 9,400 square miles, slightly larger than New Hamp- timber is self-evident; all necessary permits are applied for shire, Olancho makes up one-fifth of the country’s territory. and approved, taxes are paid, and companies act in accor- Forests, mostly conifers, cover 67.9 percent of this sparsely dance with forestry management (by cutting only the permit- populated department.2 Its rugged territory is criss-crossed ted amount, for instance, restraining from cutting down seed- by mountains separated by broad valleys, and the higher lings, or felling trees bordering water supplies). reaches of its peaks house some of the densest, most exten- The second category is legalized, or quasi-legal, logging. sive cloud forests in Central America. For example, Company X might obtain a legal permit, but This ecological mosaic is also one of the most environ- then continue logging long after the permit’s expiration date. mentally threatened places in Central America. The destruc- Or Company Y may have a legal, timely permit, but harvest tion of the huge rainforests of Oaxaca, Mexico — the result trees in ways that directly contradict forestry laws and regu- lations. Several reliable sources say that the Byzantine na- 3 ture of the government’s laws make strictly legal production More fundamentally, as the U.S. State Department’s such an obstacle that otherwise law-abiding companies take 2003 Report on Human Rights Practices makes clear, the legalized route not out of avarice but simply from sheer democracy in Honduras is undermined by “considerable exhaustion. This is not to let logging companies off the hook, impunity for members of the economic, military, and official however, for many of those who hold legal permits harvest elite.”5 Corruption pervades all sectors of Honduran soci- as much as three times the authorized amount. ety, from local governments and small businesses to high- The final category, illegal logging, is responsible for the level government officials and huge corporations. Large land- lion’s share of logging in Honduras. An astounding 75-85 holders, timber companies, and bankers make up an infor- percent of hardwood (including premium priced mahogany) mal society in which economic interests are mutually pro- and up to 50 percent of pine is illegally harvested, an esti- tected. Companies reach into politics in the universal way: mated total of between $55-70 million each year. Govern- by pouring money into political campaigns in exchange for ment losses total between $11-18 million each year from economic favors and protection. Understandably, though re- illegal logging, a combination of uncollected taxes and mon- grettably, the law is on the side of those who can pay for it. ies spent on forest management. Timber prices are high, and The result is widespread impunity for the tiny fraction of the fines for breaking the law distressingly low. While a logging company can make huge profits with little or no consequences by logging when, where, and how much it wants, expediency will usually win out over ethics. Indeed, the lucrative nature of log- ging appears to make even murder a risk worth taking. Politics, Logging, and Money: The Fox and the Henhouse Though the reality of hit lists, community dis- placements, increased poverty, and millions in lost revenue would appear to be incentives for the Honduran government to put a halt to illegal logging, it has resisted calls to crack down on this damaging practice. Gustavo Morales, the di- rector of AFE-COHDEFOR (Administración Forestal del Estado – Corporación Hondureña de Desarrollo Forestal), the government’s agency in charge of overseeing and regulating the forests of Honduras, has sought to improve the agency’s country with money and connections, and widespread mis- performance, but with little success. The agency has been ery for the vast majority of the country with neither. structured in a way that assures loggers the upper hand. History of the Environmental Movement in Honduras COHDEFOR’s survival depends on the funds it collects from Honduran environmental activism got a kick start in 1991, logging concessions and timber auctions. Even with that in- when Stone Container, the Chicago-based world leader in come, the agency is starved for funds. Moreover, accepting paper bag and cardboard box production, signed a prelimi- money—depending on it for one’s existence, in fact—from nary agreement with then-President Rafael Elías Callejas to the people one is assigned to monitor and control, creates “lease” the country’s remaining virgin pine forests, located its own set of perverse incentives. Logging companies pay- primarily in the Mosquitía forest (in northeastern Honduras ing to ensure their compliance with logging laws has the dis- along the Caribbean, the Mosquitía includes all of the de- tinct smell of the fox guarding the henhouse.

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